I Survived the Wellington Avalanche, 1910

by Lauren Tarshis

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When a lightning storm strikes a mountain, a ten-foot-high wave of snow comes barreling down! Exciting historical fiction brought to life from the perspective of a girl who was there…and survived.

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The Wellington snow slide of 1910 was―and still is―the deadliest avalanche in America’s history. The snow came down faster than train crews could clear the tracks, piling up in drifts 20 feet high. At the Wellington train depot in the Cascade Mountains, two trains sat stranded, blocked in by snow slides to the east and west. Some passengers braved the storm to hike off the mountain, but many had no choice but to wait out the storm.

But the storm didn’t stop. One day passed, then two, three…six days. The snow turned to rain. Then just after midnight on March 1, a lightning storm struck the mountain, sending a ten-foot-high wave of snow barreling down the mountain. The trains tumbled one hundred fifty feet. Ninety-six people were dead.

The Wellington avalanche forever changed railroad engineering. And one girl who survived emerged from the snow forever changed herself.
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Product Details

    • Grades: 3 - 5
    • Ages: 8 - 11
  • Product Type: Book
  • Page Count: 144 pages
  • Dimensions: 5 1/4" x 7 5/8"
  • Language: English
  • ISBN 13: 978-1-338-75256-4